Milk turns into cheese through stirring, waiting, and a little help from acid or heat.
Imagine you have a glass of milk, it’s like a calm lake. Now, if you add some vinegar (which is a kind of acid) or let the milk sit in a warm place, something interesting happens: the milk starts to thicken, and little solid pieces begin to form, floating around like clouds in the sky.
What Happens Inside the Milk
When you add acid, it changes the proteins in the milk. These proteins are like tiny ropes that start to clump together, trapping the liquid around them. This makes the solid part, what we call curds, and leaves behind the watery part, called whey.
How We Get Cheese
After the curds form, people usually heat the milk a bit more or stir it to help the curds get bigger. Then they strain the curds from the whey using a cloth, like sifting sand from water. What’s left is soft cheese, and if you let it dry out, it becomes hard cheese, just like how wet clay turns into bricks when it dries!
Examples
- You watch a video of milk turning into cheese in under five minutes.
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See also
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